Practice by subject
Your subjects
🧬BiologyCell biology, genetics, human physiology, immunology — the backbone of every European medical entrance exam.210 MCQs⚗️ChemistryAtomic structure, bonding, organic functional groups, acids and bases, stoichiometry.223 MCQs🔬PhysicsMechanics, electricity, waves, radioactivity — plus the medical physics behind ECG, X-ray, ultrasound and MRI.233 MCQs📐MathematicsAlgebra, percentages, geometry, calculus basics and statistics — needed for IMAT and several faculty tests.208 MCQs🗣️EnglishGrammar in context plus the medical vocabulary that interviews and lectures assume you know.201 MCQs
How to use this
Best practice — how top scorers prepare
1Diagnose first, study secondTake a 40-question trial in each subject before you open a textbook. Your score tells you where the gaps actually are — most students discover they are strong somewhere they planned to over-study.
2Practise retrieval, not re-readingAnswering questions from memory builds recall far better than re-reading notes. Read the explanation for every question you get wrong — and for every one you guessed right.
3Space it outTwenty questions daily beats 200 the weekend before. Spaced repetition is the single best-evidenced study technique in existence.
4Simulate the real thingOnce you are consistently above 70%, do 40-question trials against the clock, no notes. Exam nerves cost more marks than knowledge gaps.
5Then get the real past papersThese questions build your foundation; your target faculty's actual past papers teach you its style and traps. Our advisors give you those free — just ask.
Which exam am I preparing for?
Entrance exams — by destination